A five-year trial confirms that sparing certain lymph nodes during radiotherapy maintains cancer control while considerably improving swallowing function for patients.

For the small number of Kent residents who might face a diagnosis of nasopharyngeal carcinoma – a rare cancer affecting the upper throat – new research offers hope for treatment with fewer lasting complications. The condition affects only around 150-200 people across the UK each year, but for those patients, the findings published in BMJ Research could mean the difference between years of swallowing difficulties and a return to normal eating.

The Five-Year Results

A major clinical trial involving 568 patients has now confirmed what researchers suspected three years ago – that carefully avoiding certain lymph nodes during radiotherapy treatment works just as well as standard approaches. The medial retropharyngeal lymph node sparing technique achieved five-year survival rates of 89.2%, compared to 90.6% with conventional radiotherapy.

But the real breakthrough lies in quality of life. Patients who received the modified treatment experienced much less trouble swallowing, with only 22% developing dysphagia compared to 32% in the standard treatment group. Dry mouth – another common and troublesome side effect – affected just 16% of patients versus 25% with traditional radiotherapy.

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The trial, conducted across three Chinese medical centres, used advanced imaging techniques to demonstrate why patients felt better. Videofluoroscopy revealed that food was less likely to stick in the throat, and dangerous aspiration – where food enters the airways – dropped from 29% to just 12%.

Understanding the Science

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma develops in the nasopharynx, the area behind the nose and above the back of the throat. Traditional radiotherapy targets a wide area to ensure cancer cells don’t escape, but this approach often damages the muscles responsible for swallowing.

The new technique spares the medial retropharyngeal lymph nodes when they’re not involved in the cancer. MRI scans showed this preserved muscle thickness in key swallowing muscles – the superior and middle pharyngeal constrictors remained healthier throughout treatment.

Dr Anne Rigg, consultant medical oncologist, said the findings represent an important step forward for patients facing this challenging diagnosis.

Current Treatment Pathways

Patients in Kent diagnosed with nasopharyngeal carcinoma typically receive treatment at specialist centres like The Royal Marsden or Guy’s Cancer Centre in London. The journey usually begins with referral through NHS Kent and Medway ICB pathways after initial diagnosis by local ENT specialists.

The trial’s success builds on earlier three-year results that showed similar cancer control rates of 95.3% versus 95.5%. However, researchers acknowledge that the study focused on Chinese populations, and UK oncology experts will likely await guidance from NICE or the Royal College of Radiologists before widespread adoption.

Source: @bmj_latest

Key Takeaways

New radiotherapy technique maintains cancer control while reducing swallowing problems by nearly one-third

Five-year survival rates remain equivalent between standard and lymph node-sparing approaches

Advanced imaging confirms better preservation of swallowing muscles with the modified technique

What This Means for Kent Residents

Even as nasopharyngeal carcinoma remains rare, Kent residents facing this diagnosis should discuss these findings with their oncology teams at specialist centres. The research may influence treatment protocols in coming years, potentially reducing long-term complications that currently place demands on local speech and language therapy services. Anyone concerned about persistent throat symptoms should contact their GP for appropriate referral through NHS Kent and Medway pathways, though most throat problems have far more common and treatable causes.

Source: @bmj_latest

Published: 4 April 2026

Source: @bmj_latest on X. This article has been researched and rewritten with editorial balance by Kent Local News.